Was this Mars-or-Moon zero-sum game mentality a product of the reality of limited resources, high costs per flight and restricted access to space?
Are we, thanks largely to SpaceX, at the dawn of an era when access to space will gradually become cheaper and more easy to come by?
Will Mars-or-Moon be replaced by Moon AND Mars?
Can the ITS fly regularly to the Moon, spreading the capital development costs of the Spaceship over many more flights?
Is there an opportunity for SpaceX to use profits from higher-frequency Moon flights to subsidize lower-frequency Mars flights?
There are two things I would not be surprised to see happen:1. An ITS test landing on Luna. Obviously it is not a perfect practice run, however it does offer an opportunity to do some systems tests and generate interest.2. NASA contracting with SpaceX for some Lunar landings for scientific research and private corporations doing the same for tourism.
The Moon and Mars are so different that many of the technologies required only apply to one or the other. This means that treating it as a zero-sum game is not really irrational. Among the important differences:- Efficient landing on Mars needs to use some aerobraking while on the Moon everything is propulsive. Research in EDL or supersonic retropropulsion not relevant for the Moon.- The day/night cycle on the moon is much longer. A base that relies on solar panels would need enormous batteries to last two weeks through the night.- On Mars you can extract carbon and oxygen from the atmosphere, on the Moon you need to extract it from rocks.- On Mars you can extract water from various minerals. The availability of water on the Moon is not as clear. If useful ice is found in a permanently shadowed crater you would need to transport it to the base without solar power.The ITS in particular is built around the idea of generating methane on Mars and SpaceX will have to develop and operate the ISRU infrastructure themselves. Would they really invest in doing the same on the Moon, using different processes?
But saying that it differs from Mars and therefore there is nothing to learn or validate and that it should be completely ignored is total folly.
testing on the Moon compared to simulated testing on Earth increases risk greatly is total folly. It's a totally unnecessary risk to take when the goal is Mars at least as far as testing goes.
Quote from: Negan on 11/16/2016 10:07 pmtesting on the Moon compared to simulated testing on Earth increases risk greatly is total folly. It's a totally unnecessary risk to take when the goal is Mars at least as far as testing goes.Firstly, I did not say testing should not be done on Earth. Secondly, landing on Luna mitigates risk in relation to landing on Mars. Landing on Mars is extremely difficult due to the nature of its atmosphere. The atmospheric density on Mars is 0.0059 that of Earth. That is just enough to burn up an inbound craft with no TPS, but low enough that you cannot parachute land. You have to get close to the surface and fly parallel to it to ablate velocity, changing the angle of attack to maintain just enough lift to counteract weight. The majority of Mars landers fail.Lunar landings offer an opportunity to test SOME of the ITS landing systems in a more benign environment and to work out some possible bugs prior to attempting the far more difficult Mars landing. If ITS did not have the capability for Lunar landing, I would not suggest this. As it is, lunar landing is quite within the robust capabilities of ITS and this would be a prudent test.
Landing on Mars is extremely difficult due to the nature of its atmosphere. The atmospheric density on Mars is 0.0059 that of Earth. That is just enough to burn up an inbound craft with no TPS, but low enough that you cannot parachute land. You have to get close to the surface and fly parallel to it to ablate velocity, changing the angle of attack to maintain just enough lift to counteract weight. The majority of Mars landers fail.
Quote from: TomH on 11/17/2016 09:52 pmQuote from: Negan on 11/16/2016 10:07 pmtesting on the Moon compared to simulated testing on Earth increases risk greatly is total folly. It's a totally unnecessary risk to take when the goal is Mars at least as far as testing goes.Firstly, I did not say testing should not be done on Earth. Secondly, landing on Luna mitigates risk in relation to landing on Mars. Landing on Mars is extremely difficult due to the nature of its atmosphere. The atmospheric density on Mars is 0.0059 that of Earth. That is just enough to burn up an inbound craft with no TPS, but low enough that you cannot parachute land. You have to get close to the surface and fly parallel to it to ablate velocity, changing the angle of attack to maintain just enough lift to counteract weight. The majority of Mars landers fail.Lunar landings offer an opportunity to test SOME of the ITS landing systems in a more benign environment and to work out some possible bugs prior to attempting the far more difficult Mars landing. If ITS did not have the capability for Lunar landing, I would not suggest this. As it is, lunar landing is quite within the robust capabilities of ITS and this would be a prudent test.What landing systems are included in your testing and why can't these tests not be simulated on earth?
Space Adventures is trying to book lunar free return tourist flights using Soyuz for $100 million per each of 3 passengers. And LEO tourists are paying $20 million each, so there might be a lot more possible revenue there... as long as people are willing to fly with no LAS.
For many years now, there's been a tension between "Mars first" and "Moon first"[...]Will Mars-or-Moon be replaced by Moon AND Mars?
For what it's worth (not much) I think $100 million is too much for a circumlunar flight. There haven't been many takers for the Earth orbital $30 million missions. If they priced the Lunar flight at $60 million per seat, they might get more takers...